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Wednesday, December 23, 2015

Boggs vs. Gwynn

Gwynn and Boggs, pictured at the 1987 All-Star Game in Oakland (SI Photos)
Both debuted in 1982, won multiple batting titles, and joined the 3,000 hit club in 1999. They were perennial All-Stars, multi-Gold Glove winners, and first-ballot Hall of Famers. They played 2,440 games apiece--all with the same team for one, all in the same division for the other.

Wade Boggs and Tony Gwynn, two of the greatest pure hitters who ever lived. Which one was better?

I don't mean as players, because WAR makes it pretty clear that Boggs was better (he has a 20-ish edge in bWAR, fWAR, and WARP). I mean as hitters, because they're career numbers are so darn close:

Boggs 1,513 R  3,010 H 578 2B 118 HR 1,014 RBI .328/.415/.443 (132 wRC+) 1,412 BB 745 K
Gwynn 1,383 R 3,141 H 543 2B 135 HR 1,138 RBI .338/.388/.459 (132 wRC+) 790 BB 434 K

As you can see, it's a virtual wash. Boggs scored more runs, but Gwynn knocked in more. Boggs stroked a few more doubles, while Gwynn socked a few more homers. Boggs walked twice as often, but also struck out twice as much. Boggs got on base more, but Gwynn had more hits and greater power.

I was hoping advanced metrics might reveal a significant difference, but once again it's really close:

Boggs: .302 tAVG  .381 wOBA  1,750 RC  479.7 BtRuns
Gwynn: .300 tAVG  .370 wOBA  1,636 RC  437.7 BtRuns

Boggs comes out on top, barely. His edge in adjusted batting runs is roughly two per season, while his advantage in runs created is about four per year. You're splitting hairs at that point, albeit in Boggs's favor.

But then, Boggs spent much of his playing days in hitter's parks--nobody took greater advantage of Fenway--whereas Gwynn spent his entire career in Qualcomm Stadium--the Petco Park of its time. Accordingly, when you neutralize their numbers, Gwynn's get better while Boggs's get worse:

Boggs .321/.407/.435  (.842 OPS)  1,664 RC
Gwynn .340/.391/.461  (.852 OPS)  1,735 RC

Now it's flipped, as ir's Gwynn who holds the slight edge. I think if you put him in Fenway Park, he probably hits .350 for his career. Meanwhile, had Boggs spent his whole career in San Diego, he wouldn't have come close to batting .328.

Boggs could hit anywhere--he batted .302/.387/.395 on the road--but that would have been a bad season for him. It also pales in comparison to what he did at home (.354/.443/.495). Most hitters benefit from their home parks, but not to the same degree that Boggs did (unless they play in Coors Field).

Gwynn, on the other hand, hit nearly as well on the road as he did at home. His .334/.384/.451 road averages are nearly identical to his .343/.393/.466 home record.  Gwynn would have been a .330 hitter no matter which team he played for, but Boggs might have batted closer to .300.

I went into this post thinking Boggs was the better hitter due to his gaudier on-base percentages and almost-even power, but after taking their environments into account it appears Gwynn was the superior batsman.

18 comments:

  1. Nice analysis. Keep in mind that Tony never got to hit Padres pitching. I think Gwynn was far better player... but played on the West Coast for a usually horrific team.

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  2. Excellent argument. Growing up in Rhode Island, I loved watching Boggs hit. I remember going to a game at Fenway in 1990 vs. the A's where he drilled the Monster four times (3 doubles, one single hit very hard) in a wild 11-10 victory. But, I always thought Gwynn was slightly better, due to his low strikeout totals and knack for hitting pitches out of the strike zone. Plus, he maintained a high level of offense longer: dude hit .338 at 39, with only 14 Ks !!! Richard

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    1. Boggs is a drinker, look at the declining stats after age 30... Gwynn while becoming obese had better years later on... hhmm . Ped's

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    2. Wait, are you implying Gwynn was on PEDs? That’s a complete joke! It is well documented that Gwynn got better because he studied his at bats and the pitchers he faced. He was one of the first players to use video tape to deconstruct his swing and he was an incredible athlete. Remember, he was drafted by the NBA as well as MLB. He got slower with age but his hand-eye coordination and his knowledge of the game, its pitchers and hitting didn’t until the very end of his career. Sorry, no one has ever linked him with any PEDs, drugs, alcohol or any banned substance. He played the game legit. Unfortunately he was addicted to chewing tobacco, which is what ultimately led to his death, but no drugs.

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    3. Trolling with the TruthAugust 14, 2024 at 3:45 PM

      Gwynn has never been linked to PEDs and he was probably clean but assuming with any certainty that any athlete is clean is naive. Athletes are always looking for an edge. MLB is filled with a long history of rule breaking and players taking drugs to try to improve their performance. The only thing that changes are the drugs they take.

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  3. That game was actually in 1991; Jack Clark hit three homers, including a walk-off in the 14th inning.

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  4. thats a great picture Boggs and Gwynn, childhood idols

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  5. Gwynn had the better career, but Boggs isn't far behind. Along with Rod Carew, they were the best hitters of my lifetime. George Brett and Ichiro Suzuki are up there as well. 25 batting titles between those five guys.

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  6. Ichiro is wildly overrated......didnt walk

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    1. Lol. Ichiro had 647 career walks. Tiny had like 790 or so. Ichiro came over at 27. If he started at 22 or 23, he would have more walks. He is not overrated. He was great. His stats took a nosedive as he aged but the first 10 seasons of his MLB career were awesome.

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  7. Tony competed for .400 on a team that was 23 games under .500 when the strike happened. A typically abysmal Padres team with no one to protect Tony. Pitchers could pitch around him—or at least try. He still was hitting .394. Enough said.

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